The Scarlet Thread of Scandal: Morality and the American PresidencyRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 22.12.1999 - 224 Seiten Never before have Americans been more concerned about the moral dimensions of presidential leadership. What role should morality play in the decision making of our most powerful elected official? What did the Founders think about the significance of morality in this cherished political institution? Does the private behavior of a president influence his or her ability to lead our nation? In The Scarlet Thread of Scandal, eminent scholar Charles W. Dunn turns a penetrating eye to the history of presidential scandals to answer these and other pressing questions. Scandals are surely nothing new in the White House_ever since the creation of the republic, presidents have made morally questionable judgments, whether constitutional, ethical, legal, or personal. In eloquent and judicious prose, Dunn chronicles the numerous controversies in presidential history, paying particular attention to their impact on the American people and public memory. The Scarlet Thread of Scandal will make all Americans think differently about past, present, and future presidents. |
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Seite 4
... Supreme Court ordered him to. Clinton filed many lawsuits and appeals, losing almost every one, to delay cooperating with the investigation. ° Deny. Recognizing that they occupied the most powerful and. CHAPTER ONE.
... Supreme Court ordered him to. Clinton filed many lawsuits and appeals, losing almost every one, to delay cooperating with the investigation. ° Deny. Recognizing that they occupied the most powerful and. CHAPTER ONE.
Seite 10
... courts also have a role to play. In U. S. 1/. Nixon in 1973, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled that the doctrine of executive privilege does not allow a president to withhold evidence that is material to a criminal trial. Then, in over a ...
... courts also have a role to play. In U. S. 1/. Nixon in 1973, a unanimous Supreme Court ruled that the doctrine of executive privilege does not allow a president to withhold evidence that is material to a criminal trial. Then, in over a ...
Seite 19
... Supreme Court. Alexis de Tocqueville put this interpretation on their actions: The greatest part of British America was peopled by men who, having shaken off the authority of the Pope, acknowledged no other religious supremacy. They ...
... Supreme Court. Alexis de Tocqueville put this interpretation on their actions: The greatest part of British America was peopled by men who, having shaken off the authority of the Pope, acknowledged no other religious supremacy. They ...
Seite 22
... Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, for example, said that words in the Constitution are “so restricted by their intrinsic meaning or by their history or by tradition or by prior decisions that they leave the individual justice ...
... Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter, for example, said that words in the Constitution are “so restricted by their intrinsic meaning or by their history or by tradition or by prior decisions that they leave the individual justice ...
Seite 23
... Supreme Court changed the meaning of“general welfare” (Article I, Section 8) by declar— ing that Congress no longer had to limit appropriations to the purposes spelled out in the Constitution.The Court said in US. 11. Butler: “The power ...
... Supreme Court changed the meaning of“general welfare” (Article I, Section 8) by declar— ing that Congress no longer had to limit appropriations to the purposes spelled out in the Constitution.The Court said in US. 11. Butler: “The power ...
Inhalt
1 | |
17 | |
41 | |
79 | |
5 TARNISHING THE GOLDEN AGE 19611975 | 113 |
6 POSTMODERN PRESIDENTIAL MORALITY | 137 |
7 THE SEAMLESS GARMENT OF MORALITY | 165 |
NOTES | 187 |
1 THE SCARLET THREAD OF SCANDAL | 1 |
2 THE MORAL KALEIDOSCOPE | 17 |
3 ORIGINS OF MORAL CONFLICT IN THE MODERN ERA | 41 |
4 PRESIDENTIAL SCANDAL IN A GOLDEN AGE 19321960 | 79 |
5 TARNISHING THE GOLDEN AGE 19611975 | 113 |
6 POSTMODERN PRESIDENTIAL MORALITY | 137 |
7 THE SEAMLESS GARMENT OF MORALITY | 165 |
NOTES | 187 |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
The Scarlet Thread of Scandal: Morality and the American Presidency Charles W. Dunn Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2001 |
The Scarlet Thread of Scandal: Morality and the American Presidency Charles W. Dunn Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 2000 |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
actions Adams administration agenda Alexis de Tocqueville America’s moral American politics American Presidency became believed Bill Clinton Bush campaign Carter character Christian civil rights Collins Complete U.S. Presidents compromise confidence Congress conservative Constitution convictions Coolidge culture decision DeGregorio democracy Democrats Doris Kearns Goodwin economic Eisenhower Eisenhower’s election Federalist Federalist Papers first Ford Franklin Franklin D Gerald Ford Graff Harding Harding’s Harry S.Truman Hoover immorality impeachment influence Jackson Jefferson Jimmy Carter John Johnson Kennedy Kennedy’s leader liberal Lincoln Lyndon Madison McCullough McKinley McKinley’s Monica Lewinsky moral issues moral scandals NewYork Nixon office ofthe Party Party’s personal morality popular President Clinton presidential leadership presidential morality public policy Reagan reflected religion religious Republican Ronald Reagan Roosevelt sacrificed Scorpion Scorpion Ibngues Senate slavery social Soviet Supreme Court television tion today’s Truman trust United Vietnam vision vote wanted Washington Watergate White House William William Jefferson Clinton York